Concert on the Mountain

Oct 2016 snowbasin web (1 of 14)

Since we had our Army son home this past weekend we decided to all head up to the ski resort for the last open air concert of the season.   

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We are nothing if not easily amused.  With ourselves, half the time. 

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It was chilly on the top of the mountain.  Auntumn is in full swing without a doubt. 

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Asher and Kym rode the gondola to the top.  I've walked it but tend to pass on ride, especially once I watched them pause over and over to let folks on and off at the other ends. 

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We love the interior of the lodge as much as roaming around the outside.  I want their decorator! The design is surprisingly English for a resort in the American West. 

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All the bands were great. My fave was the headline act - Leftover Cuties.  They had a dixieland/old school vibe complete with honky tonk piano, horns and slide whistle.  

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I simply suggested maybe he throw his arm around his sister for picture.  Yeah…not happening.  

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king of the mountain….

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not mine but I couldn't resist.  

 

A poem for Monday, and where September went

A September poem for Theresa's challenge, even though it is no longer September.  

Sept 2016 WI  web (1 of 3)

 This poem came by way of a text from my sweet friend who had read it and thought I would like it as well.  I did.  I do.  It made me think back on a month that is largely a blur to me, a month I would normally have savored well, had the circumstances been different.  

My Army son has been here.  "I have been shooting a lot," I told him.  (photography) "You aren't writing as much though," he remarked.  It's true.  Partly it is because there aren't words for all that has happened in my heart these past few months. When they do come they either choke up in my throat or come spilling out, tumbling over one another leaving me dizzy with the emotion.

We buried my mother in September.  

Surely other things happened.  So many things.  School started.  Football and soccer games were won and lost.  The trees began to turn.  The rain came once more to these dry foothills.  Days filled up with activity, one after another, and tended to pass in a stream of consciousness manner, and so it has been quiet here.

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When Rebecca sent me this poem though I thought of one September evening when I truly stopped and felt the damp late summer grass brushing my legs and watched my daughter brush errant strands of hair from her sweaty brow as she rested on the edge of her grandparents' corn crib. The mosquitos hummed. Tendrils of grapevine coiled up on empty vines. Moments like those get you through Septembers like this.

I love that she knew this and makes sure I am doing just that. 

Storing September

(a poem by Elizabeth Rooney)

You ask me what I did today.
I could pretend and say,
"I don't remember."
But no, I'll tell you what I did today–
I stored September.
Sat in the sun and let the sun sink in,
Let all the warmth of it caress my skin.
When winter comes, my skin will still remember
The day I stored September.

And then my eyes–
I filled them with the deepest, bluest skies
And all the traceries of wasps and butterflies.
When winter comes, my eyes will still remember
The day they stored September.

And there was cricket song to fill my ears!
And the taste of grapes
And the deep purple o f them!
And asters, like small clumps of sky…
You know how much I love them.
That's what I did today
And I know why.
Just simply for the love of it,
I stored September.

Sept 2016 WI  web (2 of 3)

 

Poetry Monday – to rest in grace

 

Aug 2016 WI fishing web (1 of 1)

The Peace of Wild Things

When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free. 

Wendall Berry 

 

We read the Rime of the Ancient Mariner last Monday.  Just for fun.  I had started reading it alone and got so caught up in it I began to read aloud.  My friend and editor Theresa Thomas who had also shared poetry last week suggested a challenge, that we share a bit of poetry close to our hearts each Monday.  

As political debates heat up in the news and even among friends and neighbors a bit of despair can creep into our hearts late at night, wondering how this or that will all play out – for us, for our children. This piece reminds me how to meet that worry. 

On the Farm in Eastern Washington

Jul 2016 WA web (1 of 1)

As we reach for our sweaters today I remember a sunny afternoon in Washington this summer.  We were invited to visit a friends' homestead full of different varieties of goats and fowl and flowers.  You should never turn down an offer like that.  Though life has taken us on and off the farm over the years my heart remains on a homestead.  I wish I could show you all the creative touches around every corner. 

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No surprise here – I was hanging out with the goats.  Meantime the girls were so very excited to see horses again. 

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Jul 2016 WA web (7 of 7)

"Farmgirl is a state of the heart." – Mary Jane Butters

on tending the human garden

Aug 2016 jean garden web (1 of 1)

"How precious a thing is the human family. Is it not worth some sacrifice in time, energy, safety, discomfort, work? Does anything come forth without work?   Somebody has to get up early, stay up late, do more than the others, if the human garden is to be a thing of beauty."

-Edith Schaeffer,  What is a Family?  

(image taken walking through my mother-in-law's garden just before dark last week)

the honor system

Aug 2016 watermelons wi web (2 of 7)

Somewhere in south central Wisconsin we slowed for the stoplight and one of them yelled, "Dad!! Can we get some of those??" We had to check the sign twice but yes they were a dollar apiece and yes we pulled over and yes this abundant wagon was unmanned. At the end of a summer that has at times sorely tested me came this sweet reminder.  

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All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope.

- Winston Churchill

 

 

 

stepping out

There she is.  In her new apartment with the matching towels she bought and the pillows we made.  Truth be told we were finishing them on the road driving to the apartment.  I guess you keep fussing and fixing as long as you possibly can.  Then the hour comes, like it or not, when you have to pull away from the curb.  

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Aug 2016 M apt web (1 of 9)

I did ok with the pulling away part.  She's got this.  This girl knows her mind and moves with determination towards her goals.  No, it wasn't pulling away when it hit me.  It was when we turned into our own driveway some days later and noticed all the cars.  

"Dad's home."  

"Aidan's home too."  

"Everyone's home already."  "

"Not everyone.  Moira's not home."

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Then some one said it.  "Yes.  She is."